HypersomniacLive: It just takes me longer to finish a game as I have less time now, but the genres remain the same.
The finishing part sure changed, but in a different way. In the '90s I very rarely finished a game. I'd get some, poke through them, play for a while, then maybe get some others, repeat with those and so on. And always played slowly, so didn't really get to finishing, and gave up rather easily when the going got hard.
Then, around 2000, quite sure no later than 2002, something changed and I started making a point of trying to finish them instead of giving up. And since then it's basically the same thing, try to finish 5 games a year, usually fail. Number of games played drastically dropped, as plenty that catch my attention to some extent get sent to the back of the line until I give up on the idea of even trying them completely, but number of games finished increased, as during the '90s I'm quite sure I could count the total number of games actually finished on my fingers. Does also make for periods when I play nothing at all because I want to finish one of those already started but don't feel like it and/or am stuck and won't start another, so just sort of forget about games for good for a while.
LordEbu: Yeah, sure. Back then there were no RTS, no 3D, no city building simulators, no MMO... But in general - most of the genres I liked 20/15/10 years ago are still my favourite ones. Maybe except sport since there aren't many good games for pc anymore or they come from consoles and most of the time a gamepad is required or it lacks good optimization.
RTSs and city builders existed even back in the '80s, even if the earliest may be hard to recognize as such at a glance coming from today's standards. Even MMOs actually, it was the lack of widespread internet access that was the issue.